America's coolest towns

Post on 16-Aug-2015

34 Views

Category:

Education

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

>

httpwwwfreesfxcouk

7269805

Ghost towns are an intriguing and mysterious part of the American past In the Old West these towns often sprung up in response to rumors of mining riches or job opportunities along the expanding railroad And sometimes just as quickly as they appeared the towns faded back into oblivion as resources disappeared or jobs moved on Although the ghost towns of California Arizona New Mexico Nevada and Colorado are too numerous to mention there are a few standouts that remain popular with tourists and some that even house a few inhabitants Whatever the case tourists are charged with being respectful of these landscapes whether inhabited or not

Bodie CAThis former gold town in the Sierra Nevada Mountains along the California-Nevada border had nearly 10000 residents in the late 1870s as well as saloons a red-light district and possibly even opium dens Its slow decline lasted well into the 20th century with its post office finally closing in 1942 Today Bodie is in ldquoarrested decayrdquo but still has stocked stores Just be sure not to shoplift bad luck supposedly bafalls anyone who makes off with anything from the site

Glenrio TX and NMThis little town straddling the TexasndashNew Mexico border was a busy road stop during the heyday of Route 66mdashoffering gas restaurants motelsmdashwith a few newer buildings such as a Texaco reflecting the Art Moderne style The movie crew for The Grapes of Wrath even spent some time filming here in 1939 But in the 1970s business came to a halt when I-40 was built and literally passed by Glenrio There are supposedly a few people who live in Glenrio now but otherwise the empty largely intact little town is part of the National Register of Historic Places

Thurmond WVThis coal town from the late 1800s went from several hundred residents to 7 by the year 2000 Once a big stop on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railway its depot has been turned into a museum and the town is now part of the New River Gorge National River You can check out the restored train depot and museum but most people come here for river rafting

Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

Tombstone Arizona

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Slide 13
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18

    Ghost towns are an intriguing and mysterious part of the American past In the Old West these towns often sprung up in response to rumors of mining riches or job opportunities along the expanding railroad And sometimes just as quickly as they appeared the towns faded back into oblivion as resources disappeared or jobs moved on Although the ghost towns of California Arizona New Mexico Nevada and Colorado are too numerous to mention there are a few standouts that remain popular with tourists and some that even house a few inhabitants Whatever the case tourists are charged with being respectful of these landscapes whether inhabited or not

    Bodie CAThis former gold town in the Sierra Nevada Mountains along the California-Nevada border had nearly 10000 residents in the late 1870s as well as saloons a red-light district and possibly even opium dens Its slow decline lasted well into the 20th century with its post office finally closing in 1942 Today Bodie is in ldquoarrested decayrdquo but still has stocked stores Just be sure not to shoplift bad luck supposedly bafalls anyone who makes off with anything from the site

    Glenrio TX and NMThis little town straddling the TexasndashNew Mexico border was a busy road stop during the heyday of Route 66mdashoffering gas restaurants motelsmdashwith a few newer buildings such as a Texaco reflecting the Art Moderne style The movie crew for The Grapes of Wrath even spent some time filming here in 1939 But in the 1970s business came to a halt when I-40 was built and literally passed by Glenrio There are supposedly a few people who live in Glenrio now but otherwise the empty largely intact little town is part of the National Register of Historic Places

    Thurmond WVThis coal town from the late 1800s went from several hundred residents to 7 by the year 2000 Once a big stop on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railway its depot has been turned into a museum and the town is now part of the New River Gorge National River You can check out the restored train depot and museum but most people come here for river rafting

    Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

    Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

    Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

    Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

    Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

    Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

    Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

    White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

    Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

    Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

    Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

    Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

    Tombstone Arizona

    • Slide 1
    • Slide 2
    • Slide 3
    • Slide 4
    • Slide 5
    • Slide 6
    • Slide 7
    • Slide 8
    • Slide 9
    • Slide 10
    • Slide 11
    • Slide 12
    • Slide 13
    • Slide 14
    • Slide 15
    • Slide 16
    • Slide 17
    • Slide 18

      Bodie CAThis former gold town in the Sierra Nevada Mountains along the California-Nevada border had nearly 10000 residents in the late 1870s as well as saloons a red-light district and possibly even opium dens Its slow decline lasted well into the 20th century with its post office finally closing in 1942 Today Bodie is in ldquoarrested decayrdquo but still has stocked stores Just be sure not to shoplift bad luck supposedly bafalls anyone who makes off with anything from the site

      Glenrio TX and NMThis little town straddling the TexasndashNew Mexico border was a busy road stop during the heyday of Route 66mdashoffering gas restaurants motelsmdashwith a few newer buildings such as a Texaco reflecting the Art Moderne style The movie crew for The Grapes of Wrath even spent some time filming here in 1939 But in the 1970s business came to a halt when I-40 was built and literally passed by Glenrio There are supposedly a few people who live in Glenrio now but otherwise the empty largely intact little town is part of the National Register of Historic Places

      Thurmond WVThis coal town from the late 1800s went from several hundred residents to 7 by the year 2000 Once a big stop on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railway its depot has been turned into a museum and the town is now part of the New River Gorge National River You can check out the restored train depot and museum but most people come here for river rafting

      Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

      Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

      Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

      Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

      Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

      Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

      Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

      White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

      Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

      Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

      Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

      Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

      Tombstone Arizona

      • Slide 1
      • Slide 2
      • Slide 3
      • Slide 4
      • Slide 5
      • Slide 6
      • Slide 7
      • Slide 8
      • Slide 9
      • Slide 10
      • Slide 11
      • Slide 12
      • Slide 13
      • Slide 14
      • Slide 15
      • Slide 16
      • Slide 17
      • Slide 18

        Glenrio TX and NMThis little town straddling the TexasndashNew Mexico border was a busy road stop during the heyday of Route 66mdashoffering gas restaurants motelsmdashwith a few newer buildings such as a Texaco reflecting the Art Moderne style The movie crew for The Grapes of Wrath even spent some time filming here in 1939 But in the 1970s business came to a halt when I-40 was built and literally passed by Glenrio There are supposedly a few people who live in Glenrio now but otherwise the empty largely intact little town is part of the National Register of Historic Places

        Thurmond WVThis coal town from the late 1800s went from several hundred residents to 7 by the year 2000 Once a big stop on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railway its depot has been turned into a museum and the town is now part of the New River Gorge National River You can check out the restored train depot and museum but most people come here for river rafting

        Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

        Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

        Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

        Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

        Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

        Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

        Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

        White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

        Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

        Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

        Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

        Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

        Tombstone Arizona

        • Slide 1
        • Slide 2
        • Slide 3
        • Slide 4
        • Slide 5
        • Slide 6
        • Slide 7
        • Slide 8
        • Slide 9
        • Slide 10
        • Slide 11
        • Slide 12
        • Slide 13
        • Slide 14
        • Slide 15
        • Slide 16
        • Slide 17
        • Slide 18

          Thurmond WVThis coal town from the late 1800s went from several hundred residents to 7 by the year 2000 Once a big stop on the Chesapeake amp Ohio Railway its depot has been turned into a museum and the town is now part of the New River Gorge National River You can check out the restored train depot and museum but most people come here for river rafting

          Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

          Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

          Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

          Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

          Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

          Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

          Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

          White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

          Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

          Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

          Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

          Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

          Tombstone Arizona

          • Slide 1
          • Slide 2
          • Slide 3
          • Slide 4
          • Slide 5
          • Slide 6
          • Slide 7
          • Slide 8
          • Slide 9
          • Slide 10
          • Slide 11
          • Slide 12
          • Slide 13
          • Slide 14
          • Slide 15
          • Slide 16
          • Slide 17
          • Slide 18

            Calico CAThis former silver-mining town in Southern California peaked in the 1880s but started declining when the price of silver dropped in the 1890s It was a ghost town by 1907 The townrsquos restoration began in the 1950s under the direction of Walter Knott of Knottrsquos Berry Farm fame Today you can still see one-third of Calicoacutes original buildings you can tour a mine or wander the old port office and school house

            Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

            Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

            Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

            Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

            Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

            Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

            White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

            Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

            Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

            Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

            Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

            Tombstone Arizona

            • Slide 1
            • Slide 2
            • Slide 3
            • Slide 4
            • Slide 5
            • Slide 6
            • Slide 7
            • Slide 8
            • Slide 9
            • Slide 10
            • Slide 11
            • Slide 12
            • Slide 13
            • Slide 14
            • Slide 15
            • Slide 16
            • Slide 17
            • Slide 18

              Virginia City MTFounded on gold mining in 1863 this town once had about 10000 residentsmdashincluding Calamity Janemdashand was even briefly the capital of the Montana Territory Maybe it was bad karma having your capital share the name of another state or just the fact that gold ran out but the city has been frozen in time since the late 19th century

              Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

              Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

              Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

              Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

              Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

              White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

              Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

              Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

              Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

              Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

              Tombstone Arizona

              • Slide 1
              • Slide 2
              • Slide 3
              • Slide 4
              • Slide 5
              • Slide 6
              • Slide 7
              • Slide 8
              • Slide 9
              • Slide 10
              • Slide 11
              • Slide 12
              • Slide 13
              • Slide 14
              • Slide 15
              • Slide 16
              • Slide 17
              • Slide 18

                Rhyolite NVNamed for the local silica-rich volcanic rock this town near Death Valley National Park sprang up in 1905 with the promise of goldmdashso much promise that a guy named Charles M Schwab sank a lot of money into the town Rhyolite had a school a hospital and a stock exchange by 1907mdashas well as a bustling society that included a symphony Sunday school andhellip lots of prostitutes

                Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

                Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

                Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

                Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

                White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                Tombstone Arizona

                • Slide 1
                • Slide 2
                • Slide 3
                • Slide 4
                • Slide 5
                • Slide 6
                • Slide 7
                • Slide 8
                • Slide 9
                • Slide 10
                • Slide 11
                • Slide 12
                • Slide 13
                • Slide 14
                • Slide 15
                • Slide 16
                • Slide 17
                • Slide 18

                  Goldfield AZThis gold town thrived in the 1890s then died and was reborn a number of times between 1910 and 1926 In the 1960s it was reconstructed as a tourist stop

                  Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

                  Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

                  Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

                  White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                  Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                  Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                  Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                  Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                  Tombstone Arizona

                  • Slide 1
                  • Slide 2
                  • Slide 3
                  • Slide 4
                  • Slide 5
                  • Slide 6
                  • Slide 7
                  • Slide 8
                  • Slide 9
                  • Slide 10
                  • Slide 11
                  • Slide 12
                  • Slide 13
                  • Slide 14
                  • Slide 15
                  • Slide 16
                  • Slide 17
                  • Slide 18

                    Gleeson Courtland and Pearce AZThis trio of towns just west of Tombstone had ups and downs and intertwined fates Gleeson used to be called Turquoise when the stone was its main draw but everyone left when gold was found in Pearce Pancho Villa is said to have fought in Courtland Much of these three towns are now on private land but you can wander the cemeteries or visit the Gleeson Jail where on the first weekend of each month you can take a tour Up the road you can also see the ldquojail treerdquo where they used to tie up unsavory types before the jail was built

                    Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

                    Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

                    White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                    Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                    Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                    Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                    Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                    Tombstone Arizona

                    • Slide 1
                    • Slide 2
                    • Slide 3
                    • Slide 4
                    • Slide 5
                    • Slide 6
                    • Slide 7
                    • Slide 8
                    • Slide 9
                    • Slide 10
                    • Slide 11
                    • Slide 12
                    • Slide 13
                    • Slide 14
                    • Slide 15
                    • Slide 16
                    • Slide 17
                    • Slide 18

                      Deadwood South DakotaWyatt Earp ldquoWild Billrdquo Hickock and Calamity Jane mdash these names are synonymous with the Old West and they all have ties to Deadwood Founded in 1876 the former gold rush town of about 2300 located in western South Dakotarsquos Black Hills is back to what it was thanks in part to the legalization of gambling in 1989 Best of all the timeless cowboy spirit has survived as well

                      Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

                      White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                      Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                      Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                      Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                      Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                      Tombstone Arizona

                      • Slide 1
                      • Slide 2
                      • Slide 3
                      • Slide 4
                      • Slide 5
                      • Slide 6
                      • Slide 7
                      • Slide 8
                      • Slide 9
                      • Slide 10
                      • Slide 11
                      • Slide 12
                      • Slide 13
                      • Slide 14
                      • Slide 15
                      • Slide 16
                      • Slide 17
                      • Slide 18

                        Sheridan WyomingWyoming and cowboys are synonymous The state has a cowboy on its license plate for crying out loud Whatrsquos more Sheridan was named the No 1 Western Town in the US by True West Magazine in 2006 So was it without merit Of course not this north-central Wyoming town of 16000 is full of the cowboy spirit

                        White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                        Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                        Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                        Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                        Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                        Tombstone Arizona

                        • Slide 1
                        • Slide 2
                        • Slide 3
                        • Slide 4
                        • Slide 5
                        • Slide 6
                        • Slide 7
                        • Slide 8
                        • Slide 9
                        • Slide 10
                        • Slide 11
                        • Slide 12
                        • Slide 13
                        • Slide 14
                        • Slide 15
                        • Slide 16
                        • Slide 17
                        • Slide 18

                          White Oaks New MexicoIf you check out White Oaksrsquo Cedarvale Cemetery yoursquoll see the tombstone of James Bell which states ldquoMurdered by William Bonney aka Billy the Kid Back in the day Billy the Kid hung out in this central New Mexico spot which was founded in 1869 Today you can hear tales of his exploits at the No Scum Allowed Saloon one of the few businesses left in this former gold rush town Technically this is a former gold rush town turned ghost town

                          Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                          Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                          Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                          Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                          Tombstone Arizona

                          • Slide 1
                          • Slide 2
                          • Slide 3
                          • Slide 4
                          • Slide 5
                          • Slide 6
                          • Slide 7
                          • Slide 8
                          • Slide 9
                          • Slide 10
                          • Slide 11
                          • Slide 12
                          • Slide 13
                          • Slide 14
                          • Slide 15
                          • Slide 16
                          • Slide 17
                          • Slide 18

                            Elisabeth Town New MexicoOne of the most fascinating ghost towns in New Mexico Elizabethtown was settled by gold diggers in 1866 and grew to support 7000 residents at its peak Its decline started in the early 1900s and the final residents left in the 1920s There are plenty of ghostly abandoned structures for visitors to explore as well as a museum opened by a descendant of a former Elizabethtown resident

                            Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                            Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                            Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                            Tombstone Arizona

                            • Slide 1
                            • Slide 2
                            • Slide 3
                            • Slide 4
                            • Slide 5
                            • Slide 6
                            • Slide 7
                            • Slide 8
                            • Slide 9
                            • Slide 10
                            • Slide 11
                            • Slide 12
                            • Slide 13
                            • Slide 14
                            • Slide 15
                            • Slide 16
                            • Slide 17
                            • Slide 18

                              Gold Point NevadaOriginally named Hornsilver because it was a silver mining camp but it never became the boomtown its founders had hoped Most of the town is now owned by Herb Robbins otherwise known as Sheriff Stone Here you can stay in a rustic cabin tour the towns abandoned buildings and hear stories about the towns history from the sheriff himself

                              Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                              Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                              Tombstone Arizona

                              • Slide 1
                              • Slide 2
                              • Slide 3
                              • Slide 4
                              • Slide 5
                              • Slide 6
                              • Slide 7
                              • Slide 8
                              • Slide 9
                              • Slide 10
                              • Slide 11
                              • Slide 12
                              • Slide 13
                              • Slide 14
                              • Slide 15
                              • Slide 16
                              • Slide 17
                              • Slide 18

                                Silver City NevadaSilver City a silver mining town in the 1860s is one ghost town that remains marginally populated In fact only 170 people still inhabit this former railroad and mining town Visitors are welcomed to experience the historic buildings of the area

                                Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                                Tombstone Arizona

                                • Slide 1
                                • Slide 2
                                • Slide 3
                                • Slide 4
                                • Slide 5
                                • Slide 6
                                • Slide 7
                                • Slide 8
                                • Slide 9
                                • Slide 10
                                • Slide 11
                                • Slide 12
                                • Slide 13
                                • Slide 14
                                • Slide 15
                                • Slide 16
                                • Slide 17
                                • Slide 18

                                  Tombstone ArizonaAny good cowboy town should have a motto and The town too tough to die is more than fitting for Tombstone Arizona and is the ultimate cowboy-town slogan From its founding in 1879 shortly after silver was discovered there the population quickly grew along with the crime rate

                                  Tombstone Arizona

                                  • Slide 1
                                  • Slide 2
                                  • Slide 3
                                  • Slide 4
                                  • Slide 5
                                  • Slide 6
                                  • Slide 7
                                  • Slide 8
                                  • Slide 9
                                  • Slide 10
                                  • Slide 11
                                  • Slide 12
                                  • Slide 13
                                  • Slide 14
                                  • Slide 15
                                  • Slide 16
                                  • Slide 17
                                  • Slide 18

                                    Tombstone Arizona

                                    • Slide 1
                                    • Slide 2
                                    • Slide 3
                                    • Slide 4
                                    • Slide 5
                                    • Slide 6
                                    • Slide 7
                                    • Slide 8
                                    • Slide 9
                                    • Slide 10
                                    • Slide 11
                                    • Slide 12
                                    • Slide 13
                                    • Slide 14
                                    • Slide 15
                                    • Slide 16
                                    • Slide 17
                                    • Slide 18

                                      top related